The couple had two children, 27-year-old Osgood Perkins II, an actor who appeared in this summer's comedy movie, "Legally Blonde," and 25-year-old Elvis Perkins, a musician. Berenson appeared in a few movies with her husband, including the 1978 thriller "Remember My Name," and the 1979 mystery "Winter Kills." She also appeared in the 1982 horror film "Cat People" and the 1980 television miniseries "Scruples."

A written statement released by the family said that Berenson was returning home to her sons after a Cape Cod vacation. Berenson had recently completed a book on the late designer Halston in which her photographs are used. In addition, many of her photos have graced past covers of "Interview" and "Life" magazines.

David Angell

Lynn Angell

David Angell, 54, and his wife, Lynn Angell, 45, both of Pasadena, Calif., were returning from a family wedding on the East Coast to Los Angeles for the upcoming Emmy Awards, which were postponed in the wake of Tuesday's attack.

Angell was the creator and executive producer of the NBC sitcom "Frasier" and had won numerous awards for his work on that show and its predecessor, "Cheers."

A Rhode Island native, Angell worked in the U.S. Army, at the Pentagon, with an enginnering company and an insurance firm on the East Coast before moving to Los Angeles in 1977, when he sold his first television script, according to a biography issued by the Paramount Television Group.

He went another five years, doing "virtually every temporary job known to mankind," the biography said, before he sold his second script. In 1983, he joined "Cheers" as a staff writer, working with his longtime partners, Peter Casey and David Lee. Together the trio won 24 Emmy Awards for their work on "Cheers" and "Frasier." They also worked together on another critically acclaimed television series, "Wings."

Lynn Angell, who Lee and Casey said "epitomized Southern graciousness and charm," was an active philanthropist with her husband. A former librarian at Campbell Hall, a North Hollywood Episcopal school, she was the driving force behind a children's library that opened in 1992 at Hillsides, a center that serves abused children.

Edmund Glazer

Edmund Glazer, 41, was vice president of finance and administration and chief financial officer at MRV Communications, a Chatsworth, Calif.-based telecommunications company. On Tuesday, Glazer was on his way to the headquarters from his home in Wellesley, Mass.

"He called me to let me know that he had made it on the plane," said his wife, Candy. "He said they were about to take off and he had to turn off the cell phone. I'm assuming nothing was going on then, because he sounded normal. We said our byes and he said he would call me when he got there [Los Angeles]."

Born in Zambia, Glazer moved to Los Angeles when he was 17 to attend the University of Southern California. "Everyone knows the U.S. has the best universities and he decided he wanted to study here," said Candy Glazer. "He liked it so much he decided to stay."

Mark Bavis

Two days before his death, pro hockey scout Mark Bavis reconnected with some of the Chicago-area hockey players he coached in Geneva.

"Hockey was in his blood. He always loved the game," said Guy Perron, the head coach for the Chicago Freeze, a North American League team that helped launch Bavis' scouting career with the pros.

"He made an immediate impact on our team, bringing in some of the most talented players. He was an intense person, and he demanded a lot from our kids. But they respected him."

Robert Speisman

Robert Speisman, 48, of Irvington, NY, was a vice president of a New York-based diamond company but was best known among neighbors and friends for his passion for his children and basketball, participating in a regular Sunday morning game.

Working for Lazare Kaplan International, Speisman was traveling from American Flight 77 to Los Angeles on business.

Said a family friend: "He had an immense passion for basketball and will always be remembered as an incredible coach."

Carol Flyzik

Carol Flyzik worked in the marketing department for Canton, Mass.-based Meditech, which sells computer software to hospitals. Flyzik, 40, had cut back on her traveling lately, said her sister, Linda Pritchard, but agreed at the last minute to take this trip.

"She's kind of like a big kid," her sister said. "She was a favorite aunt."

Tom McGuinness

Tom McGuinness, 42, co-captain of American Airlines Flight 11, the first jet to hit one of the World Trade Center's twin towers, was described by friends as a devoted family man who was active in his community and church. He and his wife Cheryl, and their 14-year-old son and 16-year-old daughter had moved into Portsmouth about a year ago and were members of the Bethany Church in Greenland.

Tara Creamer

Tara Creamer, 30, of Worcester, Mass., didn't travel often, family members say, because she didn't like leaving her two young children, Colin, 4, and Nora, 15 months.